The Historian's Two Bodies: The Reception of Historical Texts in France, 1701-1790

The Historian's Two Bodies: The Reception of Historical Texts in France, 1701-1790

by Nathan Uglow
The Historian's Two Bodies: The Reception of Historical Texts in France, 1701-1790

The Historian's Two Bodies: The Reception of Historical Texts in France, 1701-1790

by Nathan Uglow

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Overview

The discipline of history defines itself in terms of proof not trust. However, in the eighteenth century it became embarrassingly clear that the capacity of the past to appear as a totality under the critical control of the present eluded historical practice at every stage from research to judgement and to the critical reception of that judgement. Was history a practical but uncritical resource (the ’Temple of Fame’), or a self-enclosed critical project ever shy of ultimate truth? Technical manuals and journal reviews repeatedly reasserted fundamental criteria for acceptable historical practice, but failed to eradicate confusion between coping with and exploiting the information differentials between historical actors, historians, and readers of historical texts. The Historian’s Two Bodies offers a detailed analysis of this basic problem and its various repercussions for the competing perceptions of the historical task in eighteenth-century France while, importantly, denying itself any historical position free from such difficulties.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781351888431
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Publication date: 09/08/2017
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 272
File size: 818 KB

About the Author

Nathan Uglow

Table of Contents

Contents: The discourse of history in eighteenth-century France; What is history?; A practical discipline; Homo Scriptans and Mastery; Homo Scriptus: Ethical criticism; Conclusion; Appendix I. ’Portrait de Juste Lipse’; Bibliography; Index.
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